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README.md | 6 gadi atpakaļ | |
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gnmi
is a command-line client for interacting with a
gNMI service.
After installing Go run:
go get notabug.org/themusicgod1/goarista/cmd/gnmi
This will install the gnmi
binary in the bin
directory
under GOPATH.
$ gnmi [OPTIONS] [OPERATION]
When running on the switch in a non-default VRF:
$ ip netns exec ns-<VRF> gnmi [OPTIONS] [OPERATION]
-addr ADDR:PORT
-username USERNAME
-password PASSWORD
-tls
-cafile PATH
-certfile PATH
-keyfile PATH
gnmi
supports the following operations: capabilites
, get
,
subscribe
, update
, replace
, and delete
.
capabilities
prints the result of calling the
Capabilities gNMI RPC.
Example:
$ gnmi [OPTIONS] capabilities
get
requires a path and calls the
Get gNMI RPC.
Example:
Get all configuration in the default network instance:
$ gnmi [OPTIONS] get '/network-instances/network-instance[name=default]'
subscribe
requires a path and calls the
Subscribe gNMI RPC.
This command will continuously print out results until signalled to
exit, for example by typing Ctrl-C
.
Example:
Subscribe to interface counters:
$ gnmi [OPTIONS] subscribe '/interfaces/interface[name=*]/state/counters'
update
, replace
, and delete
are used to
modify the configuration of a gNMI endpoint.
All of these operations take a path that must specify a single node
element. In other words all list members must be fully-specified.
delete
takes a path and will delete that path.
Example:
Delete BGP configuration in the default network instance:
$ gnmi [OPTIONS] delete '/network-instances/network-instance[name=default]/protocols/protocol[name=BGP][identifier=BGP]/'
update
and replace
both take a path and a value in JSON
format. The JSON data may be provided in a file. See
here
for documentation on the differences between update
and replace
.
Examples:
Disable interface Ethernet3/42:
gnmi [OPTIONS] update '/interfaces/interface[name=Ethernet3/42]/config/enabled' 'false'
Replace the BGP global configuration:
gnmi [OPTIONS] replace '/network-instances/network-instance[name=default]/protocols/protocol[name=BGP][identifier=BGP]/bgp/global' '{"config":{"as": 1234, "router-id": "1.2.3.4"}}'
Note: String values need to be quoted if they look like JSON. For example, setting the login banner to tor[13]
:
gnmi [OPTIONS] update '/system/config/login-banner '"tor[13]"'
The value argument to update
and replace
may be a file. The
content of the file is used to make the request.
Example:
File path/to/subintf100.json
contains the following:
{
"subinterface": [
{
"config": {
"enabled": true,
"index": 100
},
"index": 100
}
]
}
Add subinterface 100 to interfaces Ethernet4/1/1 and Ethernet4/2/1 in one transaction:
gnmi [OPTIONS] update '/interfaces/interface[name=Ethernet4/1/1]/subinterfaces' path/to/subintf100.json \
update '/interfaces/interface[name=Ethernet4/2/1]/subinterfaces' path/to/subintf100.json
gnmi
offers the ability to send CLI text inside an update
or
replace
operation. This is achieved by doing an update
or
replace
and using "cli"
as the path and a set of configure-mode
CLI commands separated by \n
.
Example:
Configure the idle-timeout on SSH connections
gnmi [OPTIONS] update 'cli' 'management ssh
idle-timeout 300'
Paths in gnmi
use a simplified xpath style. Path elements are
separated by /
. Selectors may be used on list to select certain
members. Selectors are of the form [key-leaf=value]
. All members of a
list may be selected by not specifying any selectors, or by using a
*
as the value in a selector. The following are equivalent:
/interfaces/interface
/interfaces/interface[name=*]
All characters, including /
are allowed inside a selector value. The
character ]
must be escaped, for example [key=[\]]
selects the
element in the list whose key
leaf is value []
.
See more examples of paths in the examples above.
See here for more information.